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MLB Fans Who Bought DRM Videos Get Hosed

Posted on November 8th, 2007 at 9:30 by John Sinteur in category: Intellectual Property -- Write a comment

[Quote:]

“Major League Baseball has just strengthened the case against DRM. If you downloaded videos of baseball games from MLB.com before 2006, apparently they no longer work and you are out of luck. MLB.com, sometime during 2006, changed their DRM system. Result: game videos purchased before that time will now no longer work, as the previous DRM system is no longer supported. When the video is played, apparently the MLB.com servers are contacted and a license obtained to verify the authenticity of the video; this is done by a web link. That link no longer exists, and so now the videos will no longer play, even though the MLB FAQ says that a license is only obtained once and will not need to be re-obtained. The blogger who is reporting this contacted MLB technical support, only to be told there are no refunds due to this problem.”

If the product is defective by design, and you buy it, and it turns out to be defective, the product is working as intended.

The best thing you can do is: don’t buy products with DRM. Ever.

Bears repeating:

bearsrepeating.png

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